Mention --fast, and document running Windows tests locally

This commit is contained in:
w0rp 2020-08-27 19:39:16 +01:00
parent af177d7825
commit 6074720dc2
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 0FC1ECAA8C81CD83
2 changed files with 85 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ init:
# Stop git from changing newlines
- git config --global core.autocrlf input
# NOTE: If you change the Vim or Vader versions here, please also update the
# instructions for running tests on Windows in ale-development.txt
install:
# Download and unpack Vim
- ps: >-

View File

@ -13,6 +13,7 @@ CONTENTS *ale-development-contents*
4. Testing ALE..........................|ale-development-tests|
4.1. Writing Linter Tests.............|ale-development-linter-tests|
4.2. Writing Fixer Tests..............|ale-development-fixer-tests|
4.3. Running Tests in a Windows VM....|ale-development-windows-tests|
===============================================================================
1. Introduction *ale-development-introduction*
@ -170,6 +171,11 @@ will run all of the tests in Vader, Vint checks, and several Bash scripts for
finding extra issues. Run `./run-tests --help` to see all of the options the
script supports. Note that the script supports selecting particular test files.
Once you get used to dealing with Vim and NeoVim compatibility issues, you
probably want to use `./run-tests --fast -q` for running tests with only the
fastest available Vim version, and with success messages from tests
suppressed.
Generally write tests for any changes you make. The following types of tests
are recommended for the following types of code.
@ -353,5 +359,81 @@ given the above setup are as follows.
`AssertFixerNotExecuted` - Check that fixers will not be executed.
===============================================================================
4.3 Running Tests in a Windows VM *ale-development-windows-tests*
Tests are run for ALE in a build of Vim 8 for Windows via AppVeyor. These
tests can frequently break due to minor differences in paths and how escaping
is done for commands on Windows. If you are a Linux or Mac user, running these
tests locally can be difficult. Here is a process that will make that easier.
First, you want to install a Windows image with VirtualBox. Install VirtualBox
and grab a VirtualBox image for Windows such as from here:
https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/vms/
NOTE: If you need to enter a password for the virtual machine at any point,
the password is "Passw0rd!" without the double quotes.
NOTE: If your trial period for Windows runs out, run the commands like the
wallpaper tells you to.
Your virtual machine will need to have PowerShell installed. Before you go any
further, confirm that PowerShell is installed in your Windows virtual machine.
Consult the VirtualBox documentation on how to install "Guest Additions."
You probably want to install "Guest Additions" for most things to work
properly.
After you've loaded your virtual machine image, go into "Settings" for your
virtual machine, and "Shared Folders." Add a shared folder with the name
"ale", and set the "Folder Path" to the path to your ALE repository, for
example: "/home/w0rp/ale"
Find out which drive letter "ale" has been mounted as in Windows. We'll use
"E:" as the drive letter, for example. Open the command prompt as an
administrator by typing in `cmd` in the start menu, right clicking on the
command prompt application, and clicking "Run as administrator." Click "Yes"
when prompted to ask if you're sure you want to run the command prompt. You
should type in the following command to mount the "ale" directory for testing,
where "E:" is replaced with your drive letter. >
mklink /D C:\testplugin E:
<
Close the administrator Command Prompt, and try running the command
`type C:\testplugin\LICENSE` in a new Command Prompt which you are NOT running
as administrator. You should see the license for ALE in your terminal. After
you have confirmed that you have mounted ALE on your machine, search in the
Start Menu for "power shell," run PowerShell as an administrator, and issue
the following commands to install the correct Vim and Vader versions for
running tests. >
Add-Type -A System.IO.Compression.FileSystem
Invoke-WebRequest ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/pc/vim80-586w32.zip -OutFile C:\vim.zip
[IO.Compression.ZipFile]::ExtractToDirectory('C:\vim.zip', 'C:\vim')
rm C:\vim.zip
Invoke-WebRequest ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/pc/vim80-586rt.zip -OutFile C:\rt.zip
[IO.Compression.ZipFile]::ExtractToDirectory('C:\rt.zip', 'C:\vim')
rm C:\rt.zip
Invoke-WebRequest https://github.com/junegunn/vader.vim/archive/c6243dd81c98350df4dec608fa972df98fa2a3af.zip -OutFile C:\vader.zip
[IO.Compression.ZipFile]::ExtractToDirectory('C:\vader.zip', 'C:\')
mv C:\vader.vim-c6243dd81c98350df4dec608fa972df98fa2a3af C:\vader
rm C:\vader.zip
<
After you have finished installing everything, you can run all of the tests
in Windows by opening a Command Prompt NOT as an administrator by navigating
to the directory where you've mounted the ALE code, which must be named
`C:\testplugin`, and by running the `run-tests.bat` batch file. >
cd C:\testplugin
run-tests
<
It will probably take several minutes for all of the tests to run. Be patient.
You can run a specific test by passing the filename as an argument to the
batch file, for example: `run-tests test/test_c_flag_parsing.vader` . This will
give you results much more quickly.
===============================================================================
vim:tw=78:ts=2:sts=2:sw=2:ft=help:norl: